This map shows the 16 U.S. stores that Starbucks is set to close because of safety concerns

This map shows the 16 U.S. stores that Starbucks is set to close because of safety concerns


Starbucks will close 16 U.S. stores, mostly on the West Coast, by the end of July because of safety concerns, according to the company. Most of the stores set to close are in the Los Angeles and Seattle metro areas.

“We’ve had to make the difficult decision to close some locations that have a particularly high volume of challenging incidents that make it unsafe for us to operate,” a Starbucks spokesperson told CNBC.

The map below shows the six stores in California and the six in Washington State that will close. The coffee chain will also close two stores in Portland, Oregon, one store in Philadelphia and another in Washington, D.C., also for safety.

‘We cannot serve as partners if we don’t first feel safe at work’

Concern about store safety was main idea behind a letter to employees published on Monday from Debbie Stroud and Denise Nelson, two senior vice presidents of U.S. operations at the coffee chain. The letter cites several societal safety concerns, including increased violence and drug use, that can impact operations at stores.

“We know these challenges can, at times, play out within our stores too. We read every incident report you file — it’s a lot,” the letter said. “Simply put, we cannot serve as partners if we don’t first feel safe at work.”

The closures come at a unique time for Starbucks as more and more of its stores vote to unionize: more than 100 of the coffee chain’s 9,000 U.S. stores since workers at a store in Buffalo, New York became the first to join a union at the end of 2021.

One of the 16 stores being shuttered, 505 Union Station in Seattle, had also voted to join Starbucks Workers United — a fact that the union tweeted about after the announcement.

Property crimes up across Seattle and Los Angeles

Starbucks’ letter to employees about safety did not mention unions, and focused solely on safety concerns Starbucks officials have said, however, that the closures stem from safety concerns.

And crime data from Seattle and Los Angeles seems the back up those concerns. Property crimes, which include car theft, larceny theft and burglary, and violent robberies in Seattle are up nearly 20% for the first five months 2022 from the same time period a year ago, according to the Seattle Police Department.

In Los Angeles, those types of crimes are up city wide more than 14% for the first six months of 2022 compared the same period last year, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

In West Hollywood, however, those figures are much higher: Property crimes and violent robberies have more than doubled in 2022 from 2021, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff.

Read the full list of stores that Starbucks will close below:



Source

Pokémon, sports trading card boom boosts Target, Walmart ahead of holiday season
Business

Pokémon, sports trading card boom boosts Target, Walmart ahead of holiday season

Trading cards of the game “Magic” are located in a shop where a “Magic” tournament is taking place. Frank Rumpenhorst | picture alliance | Getty Images As screentime soars and technology races ahead, a low-tech pastime is back in a big way: collecting trading cards. The cardstock depicting everything from NFL standouts to Pokémon and […]

Read More
FAA lets Boeing increase 737 Max production almost two years after near-catastrophic accident
Business

FAA lets Boeing increase 737 Max production almost two years after near-catastrophic accident

Boeing 737 Max aircraft are assembled at the company’s plant in Renton, Washington, U.S. June 25, 2024. Jennifer Buchanan | Via Reuters Boeing has won regulator approval to ramp up production of its best-selling 737 Max jetliners to 42 a month, a milestone for the manufacturer nearly two years after the Federal Aviation Administration capped […]

Read More
‘The tide went out’: How a string of bad loans has bank investors hunting for hidden risks
Business

‘The tide went out’: How a string of bad loans has bank investors hunting for hidden risks

Signage outside Western Alliance Bank headquarters in Phoenix, Arizona, March 13, 2023. Caitlin O’Hara | Bloomberg | Getty Images Big banks including JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs had just finished taking victory laps after a blockbuster quarter when concerns emerged from an obscure corner of Wall Street, sending a collective shiver through global finance. Regional […]

Read More